Historic East Side Mansion of Murdered Dr. is Being Turned Into Suboxone Clinic

GoLocalProv News Team

Historic East Side Mansion of Murdered Dr. is Being Turned Into Suboxone Clinic

The mansion at Lloyd and Thayer sold in April, 2016 by Deb Zaki.
One of Providence’s most acclaimed historic mansions is being transformed into a suboxone clinic. The mansion, on the corner of Lloyd Avenue and Thayer Street on the East Side, was purchased last April by Oxford Investment, whose corporate manager is Johnston resident Richard Dion. The mansion was purchased for $1.6 million from Deborah Zaki.

Zaki is the widow of Hani Zaki, who was murdered in 2001 and the crime has never been solved. He was killed in his home on Prospect Street — just two blocks up the street from the Lloyd property.

According to multiple news reports, she was a leading suspect in her husband’s death although she was never charged in the crime.  (Mike Stanton mentioned the murder in The Prince of Providence.)

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Since the death of her husband, the mansion has had a range of usages. Dr. William E O'Connor Jr. practiced at the location; it housed the Ivy Spa, and reports allege it served a Consulate for the United Nations.

The yellow brick mansion, named the Sarah and John Tillinghast Mansion, is on the National Historic Registry.

The mansion has had a number of uses over the past 15 years
Not the First Suboxone Clinic in the East Side Area

As GoLocal reported, Wickenden Street business and neighbors voiced strong opposition to a suboxone facility being located in Fox Point earlier this year:

A former Rhode Island tax preparer who was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison by the Department of Justice has opened a suboxone therapy clinic Wickenden Street in Providence.  Neighbors have taken to social media as a number of people were victims of his tax scheme are concerned about the new venture.

Michael Brier, who in 2013 pleaded guilty to underreporting over a million dollars in income and violating a federal court order that had permanently barred him to preparing tax returns for others, opened Recovery Connection in Providence in June, to "provide counseling services to those with opioid and drug addiction issues," at the same location where his tax preparation services had been.

Moreover, a former partner is associated with the new business. Jeffrey Sroufe was also barred from the tax business by the Department of Justice and now, according to RI Secretary of State filings, is the incorporator in Recovery Connection and Brier is a Director and the registered agent. 

Signs out front advertise suboxone therapy --  suboxone is a prescription medicine indicated for treatment of opioid dependence and should be, according the drug manufacturer, used as part of a complete treatment plan to include counseling and psychosocial support.  The location is a few hundred feet from the Vartan Gregorian Elementary School (formerly the Fox Point Elementary School).

"Basically, as a small business owner, finding out your tax preparer got arrested for fraud isn't exactly good news," said Chris Daltry, a Providence resident who had been a client of Brier's. "Maybe he's reformed, but based on his history, he's not exactly trustworthy."

Brier was less than pleased to hear anyone had concerns. "If they're talking about me, if they have any balls, they'll come to my door, and ask me," said Brier.


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